Made in India

04 Aug 2016
04 Aug 2016

When Dr. Amrita Pande embarked on research into India’s commercial surrogacy practices, she may never have anticipated the level of international interest that her work would garner or, that she would be asked to present her findings in front of large Danish audiences. Made in India is Pande’s new interactive, multi-media lecture series that debuted at the fourth ‘Women Deliver’ Conference, held in Copenhagen recently. It has since been selected for permanent exhibition in the National Museum of Denmark.

The Sociologist was born and raised in India and has lived in a number of countries around the world including America and Lebanon. She is currently a senior lecturer in the Department of Sociology at the University of Cape Town where her research interests focus on globalization, reproduction labour as well as reproductive technologies. The Made in India lecture series are based on her extensive ethnographic research and subsequent monograph titled: Wombs Labour: Transnational Commercial Surrogacy in India (Columbia University Press 2014) which explore for the first time, the experiences of Indian women who act as surrogates for child-less couples.  “For the longest, I have been interested in issues around gender and globalisation. But within Globalisation what drives me is not so much the staggering macro movements of goods, technology, and capital but how these global processes affect and get affected by the most intimate of relations—those around gender, reproduction and reproductive labour. I explore exactly this relationship between the global and intimate in my two most recent projects – one is surrogacy or paid pregnancy in India and the other is paid care-work in Lebanon. I have theorized both as perfect examples of liminal labour markets that blur the boundary between production and reproduction,” she says.

Until 2016, when the Indian government was forced to clamp down on the ‘international’ aspect of this industry, surrogacy was big business in India with couples visiting the country from all over the world, for the chance to procure a baby. It is a hugely lucrative arrangement worth billions of dollars in revenue. The women who participate do so in order to provide for their families and to be able to send their children to school. One of the biggest attractions for international baby-seekers are India’s lax regulations covering surrogacy and, the low costs involved – prospective parents are charged significantly less for surrogacy services in India than anywhere else in the world. “What makes this controversial is the fact that the practice of commercial surrogacy has been flourishing in only a few countries (India; Mexico; USA; Nepal; Cambodia and Greece). In the rest of the world it is banned. After a spate of international scandals, the last year saw the practice being banned in even these countries and now it continues officially only in the US,” says Pande. To put it into perspective, recent statistics indicate that Indian women who engage in this line of work can achieve the equivalent of five year’s salary in just nine short months, making it one of the most viable ways for the poor to provide for their families. In a country characterized by extreme poverty, this is significant. However the question becomes: is this commercial relationship really a ‘win-win’ arrangement for all involved or, another example of the ways in which the rich (mainly Westerners) continue to exploit the poor of the world?

Pande’s research brings awareness to the various complex issues surrounding commercial surrogacy: poverty, inequality, ethics and maternal rights as well as gender equality and how these inform the choices that people make. She also makes the case for a de-stigmatisation of the practice arguing that it is a legitimate form of ‘reproductive labour’, one that contributes to the country’s economy. Her lectures are delivered as part interactive performance and part teaching, involving recorded interviews and video clips. It is this novel teaching method that has captivated international audiences, particularly the youth. During her lectures, audience members can request that Pande play the role of any of the characters they want to interact with: the doctor; the researcher or the surrogates themselves. This enables them to engage, beyond just listening to the lecture.

Pande says that her next research project will connect the surrogacy industry to another significant fertility hub, South Africa. “South African regulations do not allow commercial surrogacy but in recent years SA has emerged as the prime supplier of Caucasian (or white) eggs. While countries in the global south (like Mexico, Thailand, India and Nepal) can provide cheap wombs for gestating the babies of white western clients, they cannot provide the desired Caucasian eggs – this is where South Africa comes in,” says Pande.

As the largest global conference on the health and rights of women and girls and the first conference to convene on these issues following the development of the Sustainable Development Goals, the ‘Women Deliver’ Conference brings together world leaders, policymakers, researchers and thought leaders. In 2016, the event was attended by close to 6000 delegates representing 169 countries. In addition to featuring at this event, Made in India has since been invited to appear in the permanent exhibition at the National Musuem in Denmark.